Dangerous rail cars concern Ashcroft Council

Ashcroft Council is eyeing the train tracks that run parallel to the Thompson and wondering what’s going to roll through town next.

Council discussed rail safety at its March 10 meeting after reviewing a news article that looked at the rail cars involved in the Lac-Megantic explosion last summer, and quoted government and rail officials who spoke about the growing volume of crude oil being shipped by car and the need to replace the old cars currently being used.

“It’s shocking to me,” said Coun. Helen Kormendy, “that the Feds won’t do anything about it. I’m very concerned about this.”

According to the article, “Experts put the cost of retrofitting tank cars at btween $20,000 and $70,000 each. Of the 228,000 DOT-111s [cars] in service in North America, about 92,000 carry flammable liquids and 14,000 of those are new, stronger cars built after October 2011. That means about 72,000 cars would have to be retrofitted.”

“How can we, as a municipality, be assured of safety, given the track record of these tank cars?” she asked.

“I, too, am concerned,” said Coun. Alice Durksen. “Just hearing about how much oil is transported by rail… We need to say something. We need to be proactive about it.”